Information about Bowling Green State University
| Bowling Green State University | |
|---|---|
| |
| Established | 1910 |
| Type | Public |
| Endowment | $70.2 million[1] |
| President | Dr. Sidney Ribeau |
| Faculty | 918[1] |
| Staff | 1915[1] |
| Undergraduates | 20,275[1] |
| Postgraduates | 3,063[1] |
| Location | Bowling Green, Ohio, United States |
| Campus | 1338 acres (5.4 km²)[1] |
| Colors | Brown & Orange |
| Nickname | Falcons |
| Mascot | Freddie and Frieda Falcon |
| Website | [1] |
BGSU offers over 200 undergraduate programs, as well as various master's and doctoral degrees, including the nation's first Ph.D. program in photochemical science and one of the first undergraduate programs in neuroscience. In addition, BGSU has accreditation from the Higher Learning Commission (HLC) of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools to offer full degree programs online. Housed within the School of Communication Studies is the national and international award-winning Falcon Forensics, Speech and Debate Team, established in 1919. BGSU is home of the national literary journal Mid-American Review, which publishes new works of fiction, poetry, and nonfiction, and which also sponsors Winter Wheat: The Mid-American Review Festival of Writing each November.
BGSU has many services for students, faculty and community members that help connect academics with real life experiences. For instance, The Women's Center, founded in 1998, provides a place for the community to gather and serves as a resource center. Many student organizations meet at the center. The center hosts brown bad lunches once a month where all are welcome to join in informal discussions on topics of broad interest.
Notable programs
Wikipedia is not the place for advertisement or self-advertising.BGSU is known for its American Culture Studies (ACS) Department. The department draws students to its undergraduate and graduate programs from across the nation and around the world. Students can earn a Bachelor's, Master's and a Doctorate in ACS at BGSU. ACS maintains an interdisciplinary approach to shape its degree programs, constructed to allow ACS students to take courses from most of the departments in the College of Arts and Sciences.
BGSU's Popular Culture Department is a unique component of the university. Not only is POPC the first and only department of its kind in the country, but its founder, Dr. Ray B. Browne, also established The Journal of Popular Culture and the national Popular Culture Association, both of which are widely known and respected to this day. By extension, BGSU also has quite an extensive popular culture library, along with a music library which contains over 700,000 titles (mostly on vinyl), making it the third-largest collection of popular music in the world. The Music Library and Sound Recordings Archives are housed on the 3rd floor of Jerome Library. While the collections support the research endeavors of BGSU students in the College of Musical Arts, the Department of Popular Culture, and the American Culture Studies program, the music collections are accessible by request to any interested researcher. However, most of the fiction titles that the University owns are in the Popular Culture Library, and students are unable to take them out of the building. This policy preserves materials that have become more important to researchers as second- and third-generation interpretations of comic books have become popular on- and off-screen. The Popular Culture Library also has an extensive collection of independently produced zines covering a wide subject area. Additionally, the Jerome Library is also home to the Historical Collection of the Great Lakes whose collections include materials related to commercial shipping, shipbuilding, navigation, maritime law, commercial fishing, shipwrecks, yachting, labor history, popular literature, freshwater ecology, recreation, and the history of Great Lakes ports.
The Annual Conference on Holidays, Ritual, Festival, Celebration, and Public Display was founded in 1997 by Dr. Jack Santino, internationally regarded as a leading scholar in the area. The conference has been held at BGSU eight times, and once each in Spain and Salem, Oregon.The conference will continue to be held in a variety of locations, but will often be convened at BGSU.
Department of German, Russian and East Asian Languages [2] offers a variety of language and culture courses and education abroad experiences (Salzburg, Austria; St.Petersburg Russia; Nanzan University, Saitama University, or Hiroshima Jogakuin University, Japan; Xi'an International Studies University,China),which prepare students for the long term success in the era of globalization and international integration. German program offers undergraduate majors, minors, as well as a Masters of Arts in German. BGSU is the only public institution in northern Ohio which offers a full, four-year course of study in Russian culture and language. The Department awards both majors and minors in Russian. The Department offers a three-year language and culture program in Japanese and Chinese. The Department actively collaborates with interdisciplinary programs (Asian Studies, International Business, International Studies, Women's Studies, the Honors Program), which introduce students to the diversity of ideas and experiences.
BGSU hosts The Center for Family and Demographic Research (CFDR), an NIH-funded population research center dedicated to research, training, and service in demography. The CFDR integrates demographic methods, data, and perspectives with other social scientific approaches to understand the well-being of children and families. A special focus of research by CFDR affiliates addresses the public health and social problems facing at-risk children, adolescents, and families. The CFDR consists of a highly energized, research-active faculty from several disciplines, including Sociology, Geography, Psychology, History, Human Development and Family Studies. The CFDR is in a growth mode and developing momentum from both new faculty hiring and success in obtaining federal funding. The faculty researches topics related to the health and development of children, adolescents and families. We capitalize on the strength of CFDR faculty and focus on themes of adolescent development, immigration, health and mortality, and family structure and the well-being of children and adults. Much of the research conducted under the aegis of CFDR focuses on high risk populations, and involves multidisciplinary and multimethod investigations that have policy relevance. We emphasize the integration of demography with broad social scientific perspectives to maximize the identification of mechanisms underlying demographic events and thus provide a basis for public policy formulation.
BGSU also has one of the top Sport Management programs in the United States. BGSU offers both undergraduate and graduate programs accredited by The North American Society for Sport Management (NASSM) and the National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE) through The School of Human Movement, Sport, and Leisure Studies. Degree programs are split into two divisions: the Kinesiology Division offers undergraduate majors in Dance, Exercise Science, Human Movement Science, and Physical Education Teacher Education. The Exercise Science program has gained recognition by the National Strength and Conditionining Association. The Sport Management, Recreation, and Tourism Division offers undergraduate majors in Athletic Training/Clinic Management, Recreation, Sport Management, and Tourism. The Graduate Program includes specializations in Developmental Kinesiology (biomechanics, exercise physiology, exercise psychology, motor learning and motor development, physical education teacher education, and sport psychology), Sport Administration, and Leisure and Tourism.
The university's Ph.D. program in Industrial-Organizational Psychology is ranked #3 in the nation (behind Michigan State and Minnesota and ahead of Penn State and Illinois) by the U.S. News and World Report.[2] BGSU's I-O psychology program was founded by noted I-O psychologists Robert Guion and Patricia Cain Smith. Its graduates have gone on to success in academia, private industry, and government.
According to the Philosophical Gourmet Report, BGSU's Ph.D. program in Applied Philosophy ranks in the top group (programs 1-6) in the English-speaking world in the area of Applied Ethics, along with programs such as Harvard University and Oxford University.[3] The Report also notes BGSU's significant strengths in the areas of political philosophy, metaethics, and normative ethics/moral psychology.[4] Students and faculty benefit from the activities of BGSU's Social Philosophy and Policy Center, which has a long history of bringing excellent scholars to campus.
BGSU has a thriving Canadian Studies program, one of the largest in the United States in terms of the number of courses offered and students enrolled. The Canadian Studies Center educates students and the public about the importance of our trade, security, and cultural relationships with America's neighbor to the north. Students can earn a Canadian Studies minor which provides an international perspective and prepares them for work in a globalizing economy. The Center for Environmental Programs is part of the newest school at BGSU: The School of Earth, Environment, and Society (SEES). The school is a combination of the Center for Environmental Programs, Geology, and Geography. Providing a multi-disciplinary approach better prepares students to contribute society.
The Center for Photochemical Sciences was established at BGSU in 1985. The Center focuses on the study of the interaction of light with physical, chemical, and biological systems, and on the quest for practical application of that basic knowledge, which stimulate new technology.
As a result of historical increases in life expectancy and the recognition of the aging of the population, BGSU instituted one of the first bachelor's programs in gerontology in 1976. Gerontology is a multidisciplinary field of study that examines aging, at both an individual and population level, with attention given to the biological, psychological, and social aspects of this experience. The Gerontology Program at BGSU offers two degrees, a degree in general gerontology and one in long term care administration, and is one of fewer than 50 colleges/universities in the country that offers a bachelors degree in gerontology.
BGSU also hosts Wood County Corps, which is an AmeriCorps program (often referred to as the domestic Peace Corps), currently located at 204 South Hall. Wood County Corps is a team of committed college-aged students and community members making the community safer, helping a child get a real education, or protecting the environment. Whatever the interest, there is an AmeriCorps program that needs the courage, the skills, and the dedication of community members who have the outstanding opportunity to do something unique in service to the community. Each year, more than 75,000 members serve with AmeriCorps programs in every state in the nation. The Bowling Green State University Wood County Corps is proud to have been a part of this great National Service program since September of 2005. We are proud to have this program as an offering connected with the university. It affords participants the opportunity to give back to the community while receiving a modest living allowance and earning an education award.
BGSU’s doctoral program in history is one of the few in the country that focuses on policy history—the integration of political and institutional history with social and cultural history—to examine the context, implementation, and unintended consequences of policy decisions.
For the fourth consecutive year in 2007, BGSU was listed for its residential living/learning communities in U.S. News & World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges” under “Programs to Look For,” a section of the guide that notes “outstanding examples of academic programs believed to lead to student success.”[5] In BGSU’s residential learning communities, students with similar interests and goals live and study together. In the academically based communities students work closely with faculty members who teach classes and have offices right in the residence hall.
In addition, Princeton Review’s Best 282 Business Schools: 2007 Edition, features the College of Business Administration for its Master of Business Administration program. The Supply Chain Management program in the Department of Management, College of Business Administration at BGSU is ranked 16th in the nation according to 2007-08 US News and World Report .
BGeXperience (BGeX) is the University's values program. Bowling Green State University is committed to preparing well-informed, engaged, principled citizens-reflective individuals who can think critically about the private and public choices they make, assess the ethical dimensions of those choices, and become active participants in their community, state, and nation. This educational program is designed to help all first-year students make a successful transition to college and jump start their college career. Through the BGeXperience values courses students develop relationships that connect them to the BGSU community, and they begin to develop skills that prepare them to succeed academically. BGeX courses focus on values exploration that encourage students to reflect on their own values and understand the values associated with scholarship and academic study in college. It provides a foundation for the learning and critical examination of values in future courses. BGeXperience also helps first-year students make connections with faculty that are critical to academic success, and connects them with an upper-class student who can provide guidance and help them in adapting to the BGSU campus.
The School of Communication Studies at BGSU comprises of the departments of interpersonal communication, journalism, telecommunications, and a masters/doctoral program in communication studies. It has more than 600 undergraduate majors making it one of the bigger academic departments at BGSU. The School is housed in West Hall, which also accommodates WBGU-FM 88.1 and WFAL-AM radio stations that are managed and run by students.
School of Family and Consumer Sciences
The School of Family and Consumer Sciences is a multidisciplinary school dedicated to communicating, advancing and applying knowledge that fosters the well being of individuals and families. The disciplines in the School emphasize the interactions among human beings within the contexts of where they live and work using a life span perspective. A key aspect of the SFCS mission concerns the building of collaborative partnerships with a wide range of community constituents as to engage the community and School in meaningful and relevant work and encourage the generation of new knowledge through research.
The School of Family and Consumer Sciences offers undergraduate programs in Apparel Merchandising and Product Development, Food and Nutrition, Human Development and Family Studies, and Interior Design. These programs prepare students for a variety of careers and professions and provide a strong background for students wanting to pursue advanced degrees. The School offers a minor in Health Promotion and a graduate program with a specialization in Food and Nutrition.
The Human Development and Family Studies program is accredited by the National Council on Family Relations (NCFR). Graduates are eligible to become a Certified Family Life Educator (CFLE). NCFR's definition of family life education is any organized effort to provide family members with information, skills, experiences, or resources intended to strengthen, improve or enrich their family experience. Students take courses in 10 content areas: Families in Society, Internal Family Dynamics, Human Growth and Development, Human Sexualilty, Interpersonal Relationships, Family Resource Management, Parent Education and Guidance, Family Law and Public Policy, Professional Ethics, and Family Life Education Methodology. In addition, students must complete an internship experience.
Faculty members in the School of Family and Consumer Sciences are highly committed to undergraduate and graduate education. Many program areas offer undergraduate research and internship opportunities. The School faculty excels in the areas of teaching, scholarship, and service to students.
Firelands campus
In addition to maintaining external student records for the Firelands campus, the central campus office of Registration and Records also hosts transcript services for graduates of Mary Manse College.
Programs and departments
Career center
BGSU's Career Center provides comprehensive career services to its students and alumni including career planning, on- and off-campus student employment, co-op and internships opportunities, and post-graduate and graduate school planning. The following services are provided: (1) individual consultations to discuss academic and career planning or job search strategies, (2) career development courses including UNIV 131-Career & Life Planning, UNIV 141-Effective Strategies in the Workplace, and UNIV 141-Career Implementation, (3) career assessments that measure interests, personality characteristics and preferences for various work environments, (4) the Career Resource Library, (5) on-campus recruiting, (6) job fairs, (7) workshops related to interviewing, resume writing, job search techniques, and networking, (8)WorkNet, an online job listing software, and (9) career related publications. The Career Center can help students develop career goals, identify academic and experiential program that achieve these goals, and help students gain employment in their chosen field.University Honors Program
The Bowling Green State University Honors Program offers a challenging intellectual environment focusing on helping students develop critical thinking skills and showing them how to apply these skills across disciplines [6]. The BGSU Honors Program was created in 1978 in the spirit of “bringing together students of the highest caliber in pursuit of social ties to one another and intellectual challenge” [7]. Influential in the creation of this learning experience are the nationally recognized learning communities present at BGSU [8], particularly the Honors Learning Community and the Integrating Moral Principles and Critical Thinking (I.M.P.A.C.T.) Learning Community.Marine laboratory
The marine laboratory at Bowling Green State University contains over 3,000 gallons of seawater in over 40 aquaria including a 500-gallon shark tank and a 10-foot touch tank. In the lab, eight major phyla are represented in over 66 genera of marine life including sea anemones, corals, starfish, sea urchins, snails, crabs, and algae as well as a wide variety of freshwater and marine fish. The animals in the lab are maintained by students mainly for class study and research projects, but are also present for the appreciation of visitors and other students. The B.G.S.U. Marine Laboratory is located on the second floor of the Life Science building and is open to anyone wishing to view the animals or talk with the students. It is free and open during normal working hours. Last year over 1,400 people visited the marine laboratory at Bowling Green State University.Hearing and Speech Clinic
The BGSU [9]Speech and Hearing Clinic offers state-of-the-art diagnostic and therapeutic speech, language, and hearing services while acting as a training facility for master's- and doctoral-level speech-language pathologists. Clients from newborns to the elderly with a wide variety of communication problems (including autism, foreign accent modification, speech and language disorders, stuttering, voice disorders…) are seen individually and/or in small groups. Specialty clinics include an intensive program for people who stutter and reading & language assessment clinics.Institute for the Study of Culture and Society
The institute, located in the College Park Office Building, serves to promote scholarly and creative activity in the humanities and arts. It provides a forum for new developments across disciplines for both the university and the larger community through programs that provide long-term research facilities for BGSU faculty, an annual Provost Lecture Series that brings prominent scholars from across the country to speak in Bowling Green, interdisciplinary research cluster groups for gradute students and faculty, writing groups for faculty, as well as continuing seminars and public talks about faculty research.BGSU Department of Mathematics and Statistics
The BGSU [10]Department of Mathematics and Statistics is comprised of faculy who are respected, both nationally and internationally, in their respective fields. The BGSU faculty include representatives from many fields of mathematics, including statistics, probability, actuarial mathematics, algebra, topology, complex and real analysis, and mathematics education. The degrees BGSU offer include: Master of Arts in mathematics, Master of Arts in Teaching in mathematics, Ph.D. in mathematics, and coming soon, Ph.D. in Statistics.General Studies Writing
The General Studies Writing Program (GSW) [11] offers three composition courses: ENG. 110, ENG. 111, and ENG. 112. GSW is known for its Portfolio Review Process, a system in which students maintain portfolios of their writing all semester. At the end of the semester, instructors, all of whom are trained in assessing portfolios, review the writing of each student. This process works to maintain high quality work amongst students and instructors.In addition to participating in several BGSU learning communities, the BGSU Common Reading Experience, and the BGeX and Honors programs, GSW awards competitive prizes, such as the Leland prize, for outstanding student essays that exhibit critical thinking and writing about values.Athletics
The Falcons' main rivals are the Rockets of the University of Toledo. Separated by just 20 miles on Interstate 75, the two schools celebrate a heated rivalry in several sports. The most well-known of these games is the Battle of I-75, a football game held each year in which the winner takes home the Peace Pipe, an American Indian peace pipe placed upon a wood tablet.
The 1984 Falcons hockey team defeated the University of Minnesota-Duluth, in the longest college hockey championship game in history, to win the NCAA National Championship.
The Bowling Green Dance team performs at many BGSU sporting events. They are well known for their high-energy, spirited performances.
University of Florida coach Urban Meyer coached at BGSU earlier in the decade for 3 seasons (2000-2003).
Facilities
The football team plays its home games in Doyt Perry Stadium. Men's and women's basketball is played at Anderson Arena with the hockey team playing inside the BGSU Ice Arena. The Ice Arena is one of the few in the country with facilities for the sport of curling.Student life
Student media publications
- The student operated, independent daily newspaper BG News, which has been published since 1920.
- The university's independent, student operated yearbook was first published in 1918 as the Bee Gee. Publication stopped after 1918 for 6 years and in 1924 the yearbook resumed production under a new name, The KEY and has been published every year since 1924 as the only comprehensive record of students, activities, and events for a given year.
- The Department of Telecommunications ran student operated, independent, non-commercial, FCC-licensed college radio station is WBGU 88.1 FM and the student operated, commercial radio station is WFAL 1610 AM. BGSU is also home to BG24 News, a student-run television newscast airing live at 5:30pm three days a week.
- Bowling Green Radio News Organization (BGRNO)-BGRNO provides up-to-the minute radio news coverage Monday-Friday on WBGU-FM AND WFAL-AM. Students write, produce, and report live on the air the latest local and national news, sports and weather stories.
- Bowling Green Radio Sports Organization (BGRSO)-BGRSO broadcasts BGSU's football, hockey, men's and women's basketball, and baseball games on WBGU-FM and WFAL-AM. WBGU-FM is also the flagship station for women's basketball and hockey.
- VideoBank - Student run music video/comedy skit show.
- Mid-American Review (MAR), published through the BGSU Department of English since 1980, is nationally recognized for publishing contemporary fiction, poetry, nonfiction, and translations. Preceding MAR was Itinerary, a magazine that was established by editor Robert Early in 1972 to publish the works of BGSU's MFA students. However, the students tired of publishing nothing but their own work and suggested broadening into an international publication. Itinerary was retired in 1980 when the first issue of MAR was released. No BGSU student work is included in MAR (with the exception of occasional reviews of newly released literary titles).
- Prairie Margins is a national undergraduate literary journal published by students in the Creative Writing Program at BGSU. The annual journal features literary work by both BGSU students and undergraduate creative writers from other institutions.
Traditions and events
- BGSU's official spirit crew is called SIC SIC which began in 1946.
- Buckeye Boys State - Bowling Green is the current home for the American Legion Buckeye Boys State, which gathers high-school students from all over Ohio for a nine-day program. At Buckeye Boys State, the students operate a full government modeled after the Government of Ohio. Buckeye Boys State is held each June.
Student Organizations
- The Bowling Green Forensics Speech & Debate program is nationally recognized in several different national leagues and organizations. Under the direction of Coach, Paul Wesley Alday, BGSU’s competitive forensics team has won six consecutive Collegiate Forensics Association Championships, repeatedly placed in the top percentage at the Pi Kappa Delta National Tournaments and has hosted the extremely successful “Falcon Classic” tournament at BGSU. On average, the Bowling Green Forensic Team earns over 200 individual awards, travels over 5,000 miles to competition and competes in approximately 12 tournaments each year. In 2007, members Michelle Baker and Jennifer Cole became Pi Kappa Delta National Champions in Discussion and Communication Analysis. Forensics is the oldest student organization at BGSU and is the highest winning team on campus.
- The Bowling Green State University Student Chapter of the Council for Exceptional Children has been active on campus for more than 25 years. The organization’s purpose is to extend learning through interaction with persons with disabilities, generally working with children and adults from Woodlane School and Industries and with adults in group and independent living arrangements. They also have speakers and attend state and national conferences. The 2007 CEC conference was in Louisville, KY.
- Bowling Green State University has a very multinational campus. Various departments invite international students from universities abroad. One of the biggest international communities at BGSU is the Russian community. Students from different universities in Russia join BGSU every year. The Russian community at BGSU provides an enthusiastic support to the BGSU Russian Club where American students come to learn about Russian customs and traditions and try out their Russian language skills in informal conversational settings with Russian native speakers. The BGSU Russian club is a growing organization which attracts students not only from the BGSU Russian program but also from other departments, such as International Studies, Music, History, and Criminal Justice. One of the most popular events organized with the help of the BGSU Russian Club is the annual undergraduate research conference "Facing Russian in 21st Century". This conference is dedicated to current issues in modern Russian culture, society, and politics. Students who participated in the conference continued their research and applied for national conferences across USA.
- The National Student Speech-Lanugage-Hearing Association (NSSLHA) is the only official national student group recognized by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. The purpose of NSSLHA is to encourage professional interest among college students interested in the fields of communication disorders (speech-language pathology and audiology). NSSLHA provides current professional information to students, and provides a vehicle for student respresentation in matters of educational and professional concern. In addition, NSSLHA assists the university and the community in matters associated with speech, language and hearing disorders. BGSU has a very active local chapter comprised mainly of students who are majors in the Department of Communication Disorders (CDIS).
School Songs
Alma Mater
Words and music by Edith Ludwig Bell[3]Alma Mater hear us,
As we praise thy name
Make us worthy sons and daughters
Adding to thy fame.
Time will treat you kindly
Years from now you'll be
Ever dearer in our hearts,
Our University.
From the halls of ivy
To the campus scene,
Chimes ring out with gladness
For our dear Bowling Green.
When all is just a mem'ry
Of the by-gone days,
Hear our hymn dear Alma Mater
As thy name we praise.
Forward Falcons
This is the official fight song for Bowling Green.Forward Falcons, Forward Falcons,
Fight for victory.
Show our spirit, make them fear it,
Fight for dear Bee Gee.
Forward Falcons, Forward Falcons,
Make the contest keen.
Hold up the fame
Of our mighty name,
And win for
Bowling Green.
Ay Ziggy Zoomba
While BGSU has an official fight song, most students, alums, and fans are most familiar with the catchy "Ay Ziggy Zoomba."[12] Traditionally played after scoring or a win, "Ay Ziggy Zumba" is now commonly heard at a variety of times during sporting events."Ay Ziggy Zoomba"
Ay Ziggy Zoomba Zoomba Zoomba
Ay Ziggy Zoomba Zoomba Ze
Ay Ziggy Zoomba Zoomba Zoomba
Ay Ziggy Zoomba Zoomba Zi
Roll along, you B-G warriors
Roll along, and win for B-G-S-U.
Notable alumni
Arts and entertainment
- Actor Tim Conway
- Actor Robert Patrick
- Actor James Pickens, Jr.
- Actress Eva Marie Saint
- Writer James Baldwin also spent time at the university, first as a writer-in-residence and later as a temporary professor, from 1978 - 1979.
- Writer Barbara Paul
- Writer Allen Wier
- Musician Bob Hartman
- Comedian, YouTube celebrity, and Evolution of Dance creator Judson Laipply
- Composer Jennifer Higdon
- Conductor Gregory Ruffer
- Former NFL star, Actor and Visual Artist Bernie Casey
- Composer James Swearingen
- Writer Carolyn Forche, noted poet, editor, and human rights advocate
- Writer Jim Daniels
- Writer Robert Ferrigno
- Athletics Administrator Jaysen T. Spencer
- Poet Dara Wier
- Writer Jennifer Crusie Women's Contemporary Fiction
- Writer Anthony Doerr
- Webcomic Artist Ian McConville
- Writer Terry Ryan
- Writer Theresa Williams
- Musician Ray Davis
- Sandusky Register Editorial Cartoonist Don Lee
Sports
- Hockey player Ken Morrow (Miracle On Ice)
- Hockey player Mark Wells (Miracle On Ice)
- Basketball Hall of Famer Nate Thurmond
- Football Player & Super Bowl XI Champion Phil Villipiano
- Football Player Josh Harris, New York Giants
- Professional Figure Skater Scott Hamilton (Honorary Alumnus, 1985)
- Retired Major League Baseball pitcher Orel Hershiser
- Olympic champion in the 800 m Dave Wottle
- Washington Redskins kicker Shaun Suisham
- Hockey player Garry Galley, retired
- Hockey player Kevin Bieksa, Vancouver Canucks
- Hockey player Aris Brimanis
- Hockey player Mike Liut, retired
- Hockey player Jordan Sigalet, Boston Bruins
- Hockey player Alex Foster, Toronto Maple Leafs (son of Dwight Foster)
- Hockey player Paul Ysebaert, retired
- Hockey player Ken Klee, Atlanta Thrashers
- Hockey player Dave Ellett, retired
- Hockey player Mike Johnson, Montreal Canadiens
- Hockey player Greg DeVries, Atlanta Thrashers
- Hockey player Nelson Emerson, retired
- Belfast Giants Legend Todd "Killer" Kelman
- NBA Basketball player Antonio Daniels, Washington Wizards
- NBA Basketball player Keith McLeod, Indiana Pacers
- Rob Blake, a hockey player for the Los Angeles Kings, was drafted from the university after his freshman year.
- Doug Bair, retired Major League Baseball player and World Series Champion (1984)
- Bernie Casey, professional football player, 49ers (1961-1966) and LA Rams(1967-1968). Received BFA and MFA.
- Hobey Baker Award (Outstanding Collegiate Ice Hockey Player of the Year) winners George McPhee (also current General Manager of the Washington Capitals of the NHL) and Brian Holzinger.
- Former Bowling Green football coach Don Nehlen
- Seattle Supersonics coach Bob Hill
- College Football Hall of Fame Inductee (Coach) Doyt Perry
- Basketball Hall of Fame member, Basketball coach Harold Anderson
- Baseball Player Gregg Napoli, San Diego Padres
- Rugby Player Andy Dilsaver, Los Angeles Rugby
- Rugby Player Andrew Luciano
Politics
- Ohio Congressman Tim Ryan
- Former Ohio Lieutenant Governor Bruce Edward Johnson
- Cincinnati Mayor Tom Luken
- Cincinnati Bengal Anthony Campanello
- Israeli Ambassador to the US Daniel Ayalon
- Ohio State Senator Randy Gardner
- Ohio State Senator Kevin Coughlin
- Former Ohio State Auditor Betty Montgomery
- Ohio State Representative and Chair, Ohio Democratic Party Chris Redfern[4]
News
- CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman
- ESPN Sportscasters Jason Jackson and Jay Crawford
- Sportscasters Mike Emrick and Jim Tocco
- Cleveland Fox 8 Wilma Smith and Todd Meaney
- WEWS Cleveland's Leon Bibb and Lee Jordan
Other
- Library Scientist Michael Lorenzen
- Computer Scientist Daniel Sinclair
- Texas Christian University Chancellor Dr. Victor J. Boschini, Jr.
- Adobe Systems President and COO Shantanu Narayen
- Playboy Playmate Cara Zavaleta (Non-graduate)
- Structural Engineer Bret Murray
External links
References
Mid-American Conference | |
|---|---|
| East division | Akron (Zips) •Bowling Green (Falcons) •Buffalo (Bulls) •Kent State (Golden Flashes) •Miami (RedHawks) •Ohio (Bobcats) |
| West division | Ball State (Cardinals) •Central Michigan (Chippewas) •Eastern Michigan (Eagles) •Northern Illinois (Huskies) •Toledo (Rockets) •Western Michigan (Broncos) |
| Affiliates | Missouri State (field hockey) • Temple (football) |
Central Collegiate Hockey Association |
|---|
| Alaska • Bowling Green • Ferris State • Lake Superior State • Miami • Michigan • Michigan State • Nebraska-Omaha • Northern Michigan • Notre Dame • Ohio State • Western Michigan |
Public universities in Ohio |
|---|
| Akron • Bowling Green State • Central State • Cincinnati • Cleveland State • Kent State • Miami University • NEOUCOM • Ohio State • Ohio • Shawnee State • Toledo • Wright State • Youngstown State |
The date of establishment or date of founding of an institution is the date on which that institution chooses to claim as its starting point. Often the criteria that define a date of establishment or founding are ill-defined—or more specifically, are ill-defined in
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A financial endowment is a transfer of money or property donated to an institution, with the stipulation that it be invested, and the remain intact. This allows for the donation to have a much greater impact over a long period of time than if it were spent all at once.
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United States dollar
dólar estadounidense (Spanish)
dólar amerikanu (Tetum)
dólar americano
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dólar estadounidense (Spanish)
dólar amerikanu (Tetum)
dólar americano
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University president is the title of the highest ranking officer within a university, within university systems that prefer that appellation over other variations such as chancellor or rector.
The relative seniority varies between institutions.
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The relative seniority varies between institutions.
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In some educational systems, undergraduate education is post-secondary education up to the level of a bachelor's degree. In the United States, students of higher degrees are known as graduates.
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Postgraduate education (often known in North America as graduate education, and sometimes described as quaternary education) involves studying for degrees or other qualifications for which a first or Bachelor's degree is required, and is normally considered to be part
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Bowling Green may refer to:''
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- Bowling green, the lawn used for playing the game of Bowls
Places
- United States
- Bowling Green, Florida, named after the town in Kentucky
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State of Ohio
Flag of Ohio Seal
Nickname(s): The Buckeye State,
"Birthplace of Aviation" "The Heart Of It All"
Motto(s): With God, all things are possible
Official language(s) English de facto
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Flag of Ohio Seal
Nickname(s): The Buckeye State,
"Birthplace of Aviation" "The Heart Of It All"
Motto(s): With God, all things are possible
Official language(s) English de facto
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Motto
"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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School colors are the colors chosen by a school to represent it on uniforms and other items of identification. Most schools have two colors, which are usually chosen to avoid conflicts with other schools with which the school competes in sports and other activities.
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The athletic nickname, or equivalently athletic moniker, of a university or college within the United States is the name officially adopted by that institution for at least the members of its athletic teams.
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Bowling Green Falcons
University Bowling Green State University
Conference Mid-American Conference,
CCHA (Hockey)
NCAA Division I
(Division I FBS in Football)
Athletics Director Greg Christopher
Location Bowling Green, OH
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University Bowling Green State University
Conference Mid-American Conference,
CCHA (Hockey)
NCAA Division I
(Division I FBS in Football)
Athletics Director Greg Christopher
Location Bowling Green, OH
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mascot – originally a term for any person, animal, or object thought to bring luck – now includes anything used to represent a group with a common public identity, such as a school, professional sports team, society, military unit, or brand name.
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A website (alternatively, Web site or web site) is a collection of Web pages, images, videos or other digital assets that is hosted on one or several Web server(s), usually accessible via the Internet, cell phone or a LAN.
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Bowling Green, Ohio
Seal
Nickname: BG
Location in Ohio
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Ohio
County Wood
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Seal
Nickname: BG
Location in Ohio
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Ohio
County Wood
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Motto
"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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"In God We Trust" (since 1956)
"E Pluribus Unum" ("From Many, One"; Latin, traditional)
Anthem
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Toledo, Ohio
Flag
Seal
Nickname: The Glass City
Location in the state of Ohio
Location of Toledo within Lucas County, Ohio.
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Flag
Seal
Nickname: The Glass City
Location in the state of Ohio
Location of Toledo within Lucas County, Ohio.
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Main route of the Interstate Highway System
1786.5 mi[1] (0 km)
SR 826/924 near Miami, FL
I-10 near Lake City, FL
I-20 in Atlanta, GA
I-40 in Knoxville, TN
I-64 in Lexington, KY
I-70 near Dayton, OH
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1880s 1890s 1900s - 1910s - 1920s 1930s 1940s
1907 1908 1909 - 1910 - 1911 1912 1913
Year 1910 (MCMX
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1880s 1890s 1900s - 1910s - 1920s 1930s 1940s
1907 1908 1909 - 1910 - 1911 1912 1913
Year 1910 (MCMX
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Kent State University (also known as Kent, Kent State or KSU) is one of America’s largest university systems, the third largest university in Ohio after Ohio State University (57,748) and the University of Cincinnati (35,364), and the largest residential
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20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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1970s 1980s 1990s - 2000s - 2010s 2020s 2030s
2004 2005 2006 - 2007 - 2008 2009 2010
2007 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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This article or section contains information about scheduled or expected future events.
It may contain tentative information; the content may change as the event approaches and more information becomes available.
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It may contain tentative information; the content may change as the event approaches and more information becomes available.
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A normal school or teachers college is an educational institution for training teachers. Its purpose is to establish teaching standards or norms, hence its name.
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The Higher Learning Commission is part of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools. The Higher Learning Commission oversees the accreditation of degree-granting colleges and universities in nineteen Midwestern and South-Central states, including Arkansas, Arizona,
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The North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA) is one of six regional accreditation organizations recognized by the United States Department of Education and Council for Higher Education Accreditation.
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BGSU Firelands is a a satellite college that is connected to Bowling Green State University. BGSU Firelands is located only a stone's throw from the shores of Lake Erie at Huron, Ohio, and about 60 miles east of Bowling Green, Ohio.
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Coordinates
Primary sources Detroit River
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Primary sources Detroit River
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Huron, Ohio
Aerial Photograph of Huron, Ohio, looking due south
Seal
Motto:
Location of Huron, Ohio
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Ohio
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Aerial Photograph of Huron, Ohio, looking due south
Seal
Motto:
Location of Huron, Ohio
Coordinates:
Country United States
State Ohio
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BGSU Firelands is a a satellite college that is connected to Bowling Green State University. BGSU Firelands is located only a stone's throw from the shores of Lake Erie at Huron, Ohio, and about 60 miles east of Bowling Green, Ohio.
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Mary Manse College was a Catholic institution of higher education located in Toledo, Ohio from 1922 until 1975. The college was founded in 1922 at the request of the Bishop of Toledo, Samuel Stritch.
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